Sourcebook 08

Human-Grade Trust Architecture

Governance, Public Trust, Money Flow, Anti-Capture Design, Commons Funding, and Institutional Durability

Sourcebook 08 is the Human-Grade Trust Architecture layer of Human-Grade University. It gives HGU its language for studying how systems make trust inspectable, power bounded, money purpose-bound, public claims accountable, roles separable, consequences visible, and humane systems harder to capture.

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PDF for reading — Sourcebook 08: Human-Grade Trust Architecture

DOCX to give an LLM — Sourcebook 08: Human-Grade Trust Architecture

About This Sourcebook

Sourcebook 08 gives Human-Grade University its source layer for Human-Grade Trust Architecture.

It defines Human-Grade Trust Architecture, Trust as Architecture, Structure Before Trust Claims, Public Trust as the Product, Role-Bounded Authority, Stewardship Without Ownership, Contribution Without Control, Replaceability as Legitimacy, Many Narrow Vetoes / No Total Veto, Purpose-Bound Revenue Architecture, Mechanical Money Spine, Public Registry as Reality Layer, Receipts Beat Claims, Scope Integrity, Status Without Immunity, Judgment Council, Mission-Locked Operator, Non-Extractive Eligibility Test, Commons Funding, Symbol-to-Structure Alignment, Launch Sequencing, and the practical tools HGU uses to study trust as structure rather than reassurance.

The central question of this sourcebook is:

What structure makes a trust claim inspectable, bounded, correctable, and durable?

A system may begin with a public promise, mark, registry, product claim, funding statement, advisory board, certification surface, governance page, or support policy. Sourcebook 08 asks whether that promise is supported by roles, records, receipts, constraints, scope boundaries, correction paths, consequence paths, money-flow discipline, stewardship structures, and clean exits.

Trust is not treated here as private virtue, tone, reputation, founder sincerity, brand confidence, institutional polish, or public warmth. Trust is treated as a designed relation among claims, records, roles, money, public surfaces, governance, and consequences.

Use this sourcebook when the main question depends on public reliance, governance, accountability, role separation, anti-capture design, commons funding, public registries, marks, receipts, trust signals, council design, non-extractive product survival, or institutional durability.

Working Version Notice

This is the first functional public working version of Sourcebook 08.

The Human-Grade University sourcebooks are living documents. They are intended to be used, tested, revised, expanded, challenged, reorganized, and sharpened over time. This sourcebook already contains a substantial amount of usable material, but it should not be treated as final canon.

Readers may encounter concepts that overlap, use different language for related observations, disagree with one another, or represent different stages of development within the broader HGU project. Some sections were written at different times, under different assumptions, and have not yet undergone full integration and editorial consolidation.

Where concepts compete, the goal is to preserve useful observations long enough to compare them, test them, refine them, combine them, or replace them with something better. This sourcebook is being published now because it’s already useful to the world. Future editions will continue to improve organization, terminology, examples, cross-references, and conceptual boundaries. Some concepts may be renamed, merged, split, expanded, or retired as the project develops.

You don’t need to wait for that process to finish before using the material. Treat this sourcebook as a working research library, field guide, and teaching resource rather than a completed system. If a concept helps you understand something, test it. If it breaks, inspect the break. If two concepts overlap, compare them. If a better version emerges, the sourcebook can change with it.

That flexibility is part of the project.

Table of Contents

Front Matter

Series Note

Introduces the HGU Sourcebooks as deeper source layers for Human-Grade University, written for both human readers and language models.

What This Sourcebook Is

Defines Sourcebook 08 as HGU’s source layer for Human-Grade Trust Architecture.

Opening Orientation

Explains why people usually encounter trust at the surface: a seal, promise, certification mark, governance page, score, dashboard, product claim, or public statement before they can inspect the architecture behind it.

What This Sourcebook Contains

Maps the sourcebook’s major fields: Human-Grade Trust Architecture, trust as architecture, role separation, anti-capture design, money flow, public trust signals, governance, product patterns, commons funding, symbolic governance, launch sequencing, cases, HGU teaching uses, and concept control.

What This Sourcebook Is For

Explains when to use Sourcebook 08 inside HGU: trust, governance, public accountability, institutional durability, role separation, anti-capture architecture, public registries, marks, receipts, money-flow discipline, stewardship, consequence paths, and non-extractive product survival.

What This Sourcebook Is Not For

Sets boundaries around legal, financial, tax, banking, securities, fiduciary, nonprofit, compliance, regulatory, employment, certification, and operative governance advice.

Source Material and Evidence Discipline

Separates conceptual design principles, structural claims, public trust claims, records or receipts, teaching cases, speculative designs, professional-risk material, and empirical claims.

Relationship to HGU.docx and the Sourcebook Series

Explains how HGU.docx coordinates live use while Sourcebook 08 supplies the Human-Grade Trust Architecture source layer.

Current Naming and Use Rules

Preserves current HGU terminology for Human-Grade Trust Architecture, trust as architecture, public trust, role separation, money flow, registries, scoreboards, governance, commons funding, Behavioral Review, and sourcebook routing.

Transition to Part I

Part I — Orientation: What Trust Architecture Means

This part defines Sourcebook 08’s field. It establishes trust architecture as the movement from reassurance to inspectable structure: claims, records, roles, money flows, public surfaces, governance boundaries, correction paths, consequence paths, stewardship structures, and clean exits.

1. How Sourcebook 08 Operates Inside HGU

2. Human-Grade Trust Architecture

3. Trust as Architecture

4. Structure Before Trust Claims

5. Public Trust as the Product

6. Claims, Records, Roles, and Consequences

7. What Trust Architecture Evaluates

8. Boundary with Adjacent Sourcebooks

9. Transition to Foundational Design Principles

Part II — Foundational Design Principles

This part defines the sourcebook’s spine: build structure before asking for reliance, reduce dependence on private sincerity, answer predictable failure before crisis, design done-states, prevent any actor from becoming too central, sequence governance before money, and use public commitments as self-discipline.

10. Structure Before Trust Claims as Operating Rule

11. Trust Should Not Depend on Private Sincerity

12. Public Trust Without Founder Mythology

13. Failure-Preanswered Governance

14. Done-State Design

15. No One Is Allowed to Matter Too Much

16. Governance Before Money; Money Before Influence

17. Costly Signal as Self-Discipline

18. Transition to Role Separation

Part III — Role Separation and Anti-Capture Architecture

This part studies how authority should be separated before public legitimacy hardens. It asks who owns, operates, funds, judges, evolves rules, contributes, says no, corrects, restores, and exits.

19. Why Role Separation Comes Before Legitimacy

20. Role-Bounded Authority

21. Stewardship Without Ownership

22. Four-Function Separation

23. Institutional Trustee Anchor

24. Contribution Without Control

25. Replaceability as Legitimacy

26. Founder Step-Back and Continuity

27. Many Narrow Vetoes / No Total Veto

28. Veto Topology

29. Trusts Hold Stewardship, Not Power

30. Capital as Fuel, Not Control

31. Authority Map: Who Owns, Operates, Funds, Judges, Evolves, and Says No

32. Anti-Capture Failure Modes

33. Transition to Money Flow

Part IV — Money Flow as Human-Grade Design

This part treats money as part of the trust structure. It studies how money enters, what purpose it is bound to before arrival, who can redirect it, what it cannot buy, how care and commons remain independent, and how builders can be supported without becoming total owners of the trust claim.

34. Money Flow as Human-Grade Design

35. Purpose-Bound Revenue Architecture

36. Mechanical Money Spine

37. Receiving Layer Discipline

38. Money Purpose Before Arrival

39. Circulation, Not Accumulation

40. Care Money Is for Care

41. Care Flow Independence

42. Builder Stake as Stabilizer

43. Operations as Infrastructure, Not Profit

44. Governance Before Money; Money Before Influence

45. Scenario-Resilient Money Design

46. Professional Boundary for Money Flow

47. Transition to Public Trust Signals

Part V — Public Trust Signals and Scoreboard Logic

This part studies the surfaces through which trust becomes visible: public registries, receipts, reason codes, scope statements, status labels, scoreboards, correction notices, irreversible records, and public marks that remain tied to inspectable mechanisms.

48. Public Trust Surface

49. Public Registry as Reality Layer

50. Common Knowledge Engine

51. Receipts Beat Claims

52. Receipts as System Memory

53. Scope Integrity

54. Status Without Immunity

55. Public Scoreboard

56. Reason Codes and Correctable Status

57. Grounding as Public Record

58. Visibility Without Spectacle

59. Irreversible Record

60. Trust Signal Can Be Lost

61. Symbolic Signals Versus Inspectable Records

62. Transition to Governance

Part VI — Governance, Councils, and Judgment Under Uncertainty

This part studies how human judgment should be structured when rules alone are not enough. It covers councils, binding guidance, vetoes, return paths, consequence paths, restoration, shared identity, and judgment that remains accountable under uncertainty.

63. Governance Under Uncertainty

64. Judgment Council, Not Consensus Council

65. Council Authority as Boundary-Making

66. Diversity of Reasoning as Governance Strength

67. Advisory-to-Binding Evolution

68. Binding Indexes and Living Guidance

69. Veto Topology in Governance

70. Return Paths After Failure

71. Consequence Paths and Restoration

72. Human Where It Matters

73. Shared Identity Primitive

74. Transition to Product and Service Design

Part VII — Product and Service Design Patterns

This part translates trust architecture into products, services, interfaces, support systems, orientation layers, intake documents, sidebars, exits, and done-state design.

75. Product Design as Trust Architecture

76. Whole Trust Relationship Coherence

77. Human-Grade Product Success Reframing

78. Human Where It Matters in Service Design

79. Orientation AI

80. Sidebar as Living Map

81. Trust Intake Memo

82. Software Allowed to Succeed When Users Leave

83. Done-State Design in Products

84. Commons Tool Contract as Product Requirement

85. Transition to Non-Extractive Operators

Part VIII — Non-Extractive Operators and Commons Funding

This part studies how public-good tools, commons infrastructure, care systems, mission-locked operators, and non-extractive products can survive without extracting from the people or goods they serve.

86. Mission-Locked Operator

87. Non-Extractive Eligibility Test

88. Commons Funding and Public-Good Tooling

89. Commons Funding Without Pure Charity Logic

90. Care / Commons / Builder Time as Separate Purposes

91. Circulation, Not Accumulation as Operator Discipline

92. One-Tree Infrastructure

93. Public-Good Engine for Non-Extractive Tools

94. Failure Without Shame

95. Contribution Without Control in Commons Contexts

96. Operator Survival Without Extraction

97. Transition to Symbolic Governance

Part IX — Symbolic and Cultural Governance

This part studies marks, names, public memory, symbolic handles, visible commitments, cultural legitimacy, and public artifacts that help complex trust structures become legible without replacing the mechanisms behind them.

98. Symbolic and Cultural Governance

99. Symbol-to-Structure Alignment

100. Legibility Over Persuasion

101. Memory Handles for Complex Systems

102. Mark Architecture and Scope-Bound Certification

103. Public Recognition Without Trust Theater

104. Symbolic Trust Surfaces

105. Cultural Legitimacy Before Institutional Control

106. Structure as Final Answer

107. Symbolic Infrastructure and Access Failure

Part X — Launch, Sequencing, and Irreversibility

This part studies the order in which trust architecture enters public life: public artifacts before institutional authority, governance before money, irreversible records, slow launch, copy-resistance, structural consequence, and stress testing under adoption, criticism, and imitation.

109. Launch as Trust Architecture

110. Public Artifact Before Institutional Authority

111. Launch Sequencing as Trust Architecture

112. Sequence Moat

113. Irreversible Records

114. Slow Launch as Pressure Formation

115. Copy-Resistance Without Control

116. Structural Consequence

117. Adoption, Criticism, and Imitation Stress Tests

118. Transition to Cases

Part XI — Case Library

This part gives HGU reusable case patterns for teaching, simulation, design review, and Behavioral Review. The cases help learners test trust architecture in concrete situations.

119. How to Use the Case Library

120. Scope-Bound Certification Case

121. Trust Intake Case

122. Public Registry Case

123. Advisory-to-Binding Council Case

124. Commons Tool / Public-Good Product Case

125. Mission-Locked Operator Case

126. Money-Flow Spine Case

127. Scoreboard and Status Case

128. Product Exit / Done-State Case

129. Judgment Under Constraint Case

130. Case Pattern Handling Rules

131. Transition to HGU Use

Part XII — HGU Course and Assignment Uses

This part turns Sourcebook 08 into HGU practice through governance design exercises, studios, rubrics, audits, reviews, mapping assignments, stress matrices, Behavioral Review, and final artifacts.

132. Sourcebook 08 in HGU Curriculum

133. Governance Design Exercises

134. Money-Flow Diagram Studio

135. Public Registry Studio

136. Council-Selection Rubrics

137. Non-Extractive Eligibility Reviews

138. Scope Integrity Audits

139. Trust Intake Memos

140. Public Trust Surface Reviews

141. Veto Topology Mapping Assignment

142. Action / Yes / No / Record / Boundary Map

143. Adoption / Stress Scenario Matrix

144. Behavioral Review and Trust Architecture

145. Course Seed Handling and Course Catalogue Boundary

146. Final Artifact Options

147. Transition to Concept Control

Part XIII — Concepts to Preserve / Concepts to Downrank

This part gives Sourcebook 08 its concept-control layer. It distinguishes durable trust architecture material from professional templates, branding theater, founder virtue, source costume, speculative evidence, and material that belongs in another sourcebook.

148. How to Read Sourcebook 08 Concept Status

149. Preserve: Durable Trust Architecture Material

150. Downrank: Legal / Financial Templates and Professional Advice

151. Downrank: Branding Theater and Symbolic Trust Without Mechanism

152. Downrank: Founder Virtue, Source Costume, and Speculative Evidence

153. Merge and Supporting-Route Discipline

154. Transition to Closing Synthesis

Part XIV — Closing Synthesis

This part reassembles the sourcebook’s major claims: trust as architecture, bounded power, purposed money, inspectable claims, proportionate consequences, symbols tied to mechanisms, and humane paths made easier than extraction.

155. Trust as Architecture, Reassembled

156. Bounded Power

157. Purposed Money

158. Inspectable Claims

159. Proportionate Consequences

160. Symbols Tied to Mechanisms

161. Humane Paths Made Easier Than Extraction

162. Final Sourcebook Close

Appendices

Appendix A — Core Concept Glossary

A retrieval glossary for Sourcebook 08’s major concept families.

How to Use This Glossary

Core Framework Concepts

Foundational Design Principles

Role Separation and Anti-Capture Concepts

Money-Flow Concepts

Public Trust Signal Concepts

Governance and Council Concepts

Product and Service Concepts

Non-Extractive Operator and Commons Concepts

Symbolic and Cultural Governance Concepts

Launch and Sequencing Concepts

HGU Instruments and Assignment Artifacts

Concepts to Handle Carefully

Appendix B — Methods and Instruments

A compact reference for Sourcebook 08’s review tools, maps, memos, diagrams, prototypes, rubrics, and trust-architecture instruments.

How to Use This Appendix

Trust Intake Memo

Recommended Memo Structure

Authority Map

Veto Topology Map

Money-Flow Diagram

Public Registry Prototype

Reason-Code Set

Scope Integrity Audit

Public Trust Surface Review

Council-Selection Rubric

Binding Index and Living Guidance Sketch

Commons Tool Contract

Done-State Product Review

Launch Sequencing Plan

Behavioral Review Trust Architecture Add-On

Appendix Close

Appendix C — HGU Prompt and Artifact Templates

A template appendix for turning Sourcebook 08 into repeatable HGU prompts and artifacts.

How to Use This Appendix

General Sourcebook 08 Prompt Pattern

Trust Intake Memo Template

Trust Intake Memo

Authority Map Template

Authority Map

Money-Flow Diagram

Public Trust Surface Review Template

Public Trust Surface Review

Scope Integrity Audit Template

Scope Integrity Audit

Public Registry Prototype

Non-Extractive Eligibility Review

Council-Selection Rubric

Binding Index and Living Guidance Sketch

Commons Tool Contract Template

Commons Tool Contract

Done-State Product Review

Launch Sequencing Plan

Adoption / Stress Scenario Matrix

Prompt Bank for HGU Learners

Appendix D — Sourcebook Routing and Cross-Sourcebook Use

A routing appendix for deciding when Sourcebook 08 should lead and how it should work with neighboring sourcebooks.

How to Use This Appendix

Sourcebook 08 Leads When Structural Trust Is the Main Object

Sourcebook 01: Reflective Architecture

Sourcebook 02: Human-Grade Interpretive Discipline

Sourcebook 03: Cultural Reaction Ecology

Sourcebook 04: Ordinary Life and Human-Scale Cases

Sourcebook 05: Public Explanation and Essay Use

Sourcebook 06: Conversational AI Practice

Sourcebook 07: Symbiotic Thought and Durable AI-Assisted Work

Multi-Sourcebook Workflows

Workflow: AI Product Trust Review

Workflow: Public-Good Tool Design

Workflow: Trust Mark or Certification Surface

Workflow: Institutional Adoption of HGU Language

Workflow: Governance Council Design

Workflow: Launch Planning

Routing by User Intent

Sourcebook 08 Overreach

Recommended Structure

Appendix Close

Appendix E — Evidence Discipline and Professional Boundaries

A boundary appendix for evidence status, claim strength, professional-risk material, unknowns, speculative designs, and model handling rules.

How to Use This Appendix

Evidence Status Before Judgment

Basic Evidence Categories

Evidence Weight

Claim Strength Levels

Professional Boundaries

How to State Boundaries in Outputs

Evidence Discipline in Common Sourcebook 08 Artifacts

Handling Unknowns

Handling User-Provided Real Systems

Handling Speculative Designs

Handling Professional Referral

Evidence Discipline for HGU Courses

Evidence Discipline for Language Models

Appendix Close

Appendix F — Quick Reference Checklists and Review Cards

A checklist appendix for fast trust-architecture review across claims, structure, roles, money flow, surfaces, registries, councils, products, commons, symbols, launch, Behavioral Review, professional boundaries, and evidence discipline.

How to Use This Appendix

Master Trust Claim Checklist

Structure Before Trust Claims Checklist

Role Separation Checklist

Role-Collapse Warnings

Money-Flow Checklist

Public Trust Surface Checklist

Scope Integrity Checklist

Status and Registry Checklist

Council and Governance Checklist

Product Trust Checklist

Commons and Non-Extraction Checklist

Symbol and Mark Checklist

Launch Sequencing Checklist

Behavioral Review Trust Checklist

Professional Boundary Checklist

Evidence Discipline Checklist

Final Quick-Use Card

Appendix Close

Appendix G — LLM Use Card and Model Instructions

A model-facing appendix for using Sourcebook 08 inside HGU without overclaiming, overbuilding, or crossing professional boundaries.

How to Use This Appendix

Core Model Posture

Lead / Support Decision

Output Scaling Rules

Trust Claim Language Rules

Artifact Selection Rules

Professional Boundary Triggers

Model Handling of Real Systems

Model Handling of Speculative Designs

Common Model Failure Modes

Recommended Response Shape

LLM Quick Use Card

Appendix H — Case Pattern Index

A case index for Sourcebook 08’s teaching, studio, review, and simulation uses.

How to Use This Appendix

Primary Part XI Case Index

Secondary Case Seeds for Course and Studio Expansion

Case Adaptation Rules

Appendix I — Public Trust Surface Templates

A template appendix for public-facing trust surfaces: registry entries, receipts, scoreboards, status labels, scope notes, reason codes, mark support notes, correction notices, suspension notices, restoration notices, and public explanation blocks.

How to Use This Appendix

Registry Entry Template

Public Receipt Template

Scoreboard Row Template

Status Label Set

Scope Note Template

Reason Code Template

Public Mark Support Note

Correction Notice Template

Suspension or Narrowing Notice Template

Restoration Notice Template

Public Explanation Block

Public Trust Surface Review Questions

Appendix J — Role, Authority, and Money-Flow Mapping Aids

A mapping appendix for making authority, vetoes, money flow, consequence paths, rule evolution, and role boundaries visible.

How to Use This Appendix

Role Stack Map

Authority Boundary Map

Veto Topology Overlay

Action / Yes / No / Record / Boundary Map

Money-Flow Role Overlay

Care / Commons / Builder Time Separation

Consequence Path Map

Rule Evolution Map

Role and Money Stress Tests

Appendix K — Downrank and Professional Boundary Register

A final guardrail appendix for preserving Sourcebook 08’s useful material while downranking professional templates, overclaims, source costume, and operative authority.

How to Use This Appendix

Preserve as Core Sourcebook 08 Material

Support Lightly

Preserve as Method or Instrument

Preserve as Case Pattern

Route Elsewhere

Downrank

Professional Review Required

Do Not Generate as Operative Authority

Overclaim Register

Model Boundary Sequence

Final Guardrail

Key Concepts

Human-Grade Trust Architecture; Trust as Architecture; Structure Before Trust Claims; Public Trust as the Product; Claims, Records, Roles, and Consequences; Bounded Reliance; Role-Bounded Authority; Stewardship Without Ownership; Four-Function Separation; Institutional Trustee Anchor; Contribution Without Control; Replaceability as Legitimacy; Founder Step-Back and Continuity; Many Narrow Vetoes / No Total Veto; Veto Topology; Trusts Hold Stewardship, Not Power; Capital as Fuel, Not Control; Authority Map; Anti-Capture Failure Modes; Money Flow as Human-Grade Design; Purpose-Bound Revenue Architecture; Mechanical Money Spine; Receiving Layer Discipline; Money Purpose Before Arrival; Circulation, Not Accumulation; Care Money Is for Care; Care Flow Independence; Builder Stake as Stabilizer; Operations as Infrastructure, Not Profit; Governance Before Money; Money Before Influence; Scenario-Resilient Money Design; Public Trust Surface; Public Registry as Reality Layer; Common Knowledge Engine; Receipts Beat Claims; Receipts as System Memory; Scope Integrity; Status Without Immunity; Public Scoreboard; Reason Codes; Correctable Status; Grounding as Public Record; Visibility Without Spectacle; Irreversible Record; Trust Signal Can Be Lost; Symbolic Signals Versus Inspectable Records; Governance Under Uncertainty; Judgment Council; Council Authority as Boundary-Making; Diversity of Reasoning as Governance Strength; Advisory-to-Binding Evolution; Binding Indexes; Living Guidance; Return Paths After Failure; Consequence Paths; Restoration; Human Where It Matters; Shared Identity Primitive; Product Design as Trust Architecture; Whole Trust Relationship Coherence; Human-Grade Product Success Reframing; Orientation AI; Sidebar as Living Map; Trust Intake Memo; Software Allowed to Succeed When Users Leave; Commons Tool Contract; Mission-Locked Operator; Non-Extractive Eligibility Test; Commons Funding; One-Tree Infrastructure; Public-Good Engine for Non-Extractive Tools; Failure Without Shame; Operator Survival Without Extraction; Symbol-to-Structure Alignment; Legibility Over Persuasion; Memory Handles for Complex Systems; Mark Architecture; Scope-Bound Certification; Public Recognition Without Trust Theater; Cultural Legitimacy Before Institutional Control; Structure as Final Answer; Launch as Trust Architecture; Public Artifact Before Institutional Authority; Launch Sequencing; Sequence Moat; Copy-Resistance Without Control; Structural Consequence; Adoption, Criticism, and Imitation Stress Tests; Behavioral Review and Trust Architecture; Professional Boundary for Money Flow; Evidence Discipline; Professional Review Required.

Suggested Use with HGU

Use Sourcebook 08 when the main task depends on trust, governance, public accountability, institutional durability, anti-capture design, public records, public registries, marks, receipts, money-flow discipline, stewardship, commons funding, public claims, role separation, council design, consequence paths, or non-extractive product survival.

Sourcebook 08 should lead when the active question is:

* What trust claim is being made?

* What structure supports that claim?

* What record, receipt, registry, scope, role, consequence path, or money-flow structure makes the claim inspectable?

* Who owns, operates, funds, judges, evolves the rules, contributes, benefits, exits, and can say no?

* Is contribution being confused with control?

* Is public trust being supported by mechanism, or performed through branding, tone, founder sincerity, institutional polish, or symbolic authority?

* Does money enter through a purpose-bound structure?

* Can status be lost, narrowed, corrected, suspended, restored, or refused?

* Does a mark, registry, score, seal, council, or public claim point back to an inspectable structure?

* What public trust surface, authority map, veto topology, money-flow diagram, trust intake memo, scope audit, registry prototype, council rubric, or Behavioral Review artifact should this become?

Sourcebook 08 should support other sourcebooks when trust architecture clarifies a different main domain: reflective architecture, interpretive discipline, cultural reception, ordinary life, public writing, conversational AI behavior, or shared human-machine inquiry.

The practical rule is simple: use Sourcebook 08 when the main object is the structure that makes trust real enough to inspect.

HGU Sourcebook 08 — © 2026

The Heart of AI LLC

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 — Summer 2026

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